Red Bank, N.J., train station awaits repair

The battle of the borough
train station continues as historians voiced concerns that the Victorian-style
NJ Transit station will go through the winter with peeling paint and rotting
holes in the wooden walls and window sills, the Asbury Park Press reports. NJ
Transit officials confirmed there are no plans for work on the station until
after next summer when contracts are scheduled to be awarded for repairs and
painting. However, they insist the station is structurally sound.

Borough Historic
Preservation Committee members reiterated concerns raised last August, noting
cold weather will soon prevent any work from being done to the historic
station. Historians even volunteered to paint the building themselves.

Mayor Pasquale
"Pat" Menna offered to set up a meeting with NJ Transit.

"We welcome a meeting
with the mayor. Our engineers checked the building and it is structurally
sound," said Richard Sarles, NJ Transit executive director. "Plans
are under way to do the work. Advertisement (for bids) is scheduled next
summer."

Historians are concerned
about the station going through a winter season with peeling paint and holes in
wooden clapboard exterior walls and around some window sills.

"That meeting should
be on the track two platform, so they can get the best view of the
deterioration," said Mary Gilligan, Historic Preservation Committee
member. "I'm very disappointed. They could be doing something in the
interim to protect the building from the winter."

Councilman Edward Zipprich,
Historic Preservation Committee liaison, said he would like to sit in on the NJ
Transit meeting with other committee members to hear plans for its repair and
maintenance.

"A sit-down would be a
good thing . . . since it (the station) is on the National Register of Historic
Places and had a number of dignitaries come through it," Zipprich said.
"It warrants being maintained."

Gilligan blamed an
"obvious lack of routine maintenance," which she said has become a
crisis that will be more expensive to repair.

Zipprich said it has been
at least 12 years since the station was last painted.

Councilman Michael DuPont
suggested getting NJ Transit's permission to allow the borough's Public Works
Department to fill in holes in the outside walls.

"We have volunteers
ready to paint it if it was Red Bank's and not NJ Transit's," said George
Bowden, committee chairman.

But the rotted holes in the
wooden siding is the main concern, Gilligan said.

"Painting it without
repairing it doesn't make a whole lot of sense," she said.